Profile Perfect Level 113 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on June 2, 2026

Here is the completed answer for Level 113 before the detailed explanation begins. Continue below for the full walkthrough. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 113 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 113 Answer

Here’s the complete solved grid up front, then I’ll walk you through how every clue locks it in.

SubjectFrame ColorPower SourceTemperatureMaintenance Cost
Greenhouse AYellowWindmillHot$$
Greenhouse BGreenWater WheelWarm$$
Greenhouse CBlueBatteryCold$
Greenhouse DRedSolar CellMedium$$

Profile Perfect Level 113 Hints And Walkthrough

Profile Perfect Level 113 starts with a locked temperature for Greenhouse B and a hidden power source for Greenhouse C, but the real trick is untangling which greenhouse gets the two‑dollar maintenance cost without assuming the obvious. Several clues link colors, power sources, and positions at the same time, so you’ll want to follow the chain carefully. Let’s work through it step by step.

Step 1: Lock in the starting answer and the solar greenhouse

screenshot

The puzzle gives us an initial answer right away: Greenhouse B’s temperature is Warm. I noted that and moved on to the first clue, which says Greenhouse D is solar powered. That’s a direct hit – D’s power source is Solar Cell. No guesswork needed there.

Step 2: Use the windmill cost clue to place Greenhouse A

screenshot

Clue 2 says the only greenhouse with a two‑dollar maintenance cost is powered by a windmill. Looking at the solved grid later, we know Greenhouse A fits that description, but at this point we don’t know which subject it is. However, the clue also links A’s power source to Windmill and its cost to $$. So I know one greenhouse has Windmill and $$ – that’s Greenhouse A. I haven’t placed its color or temperature yet, but the power source and cost are set.

Step 3: Connect the battery‑solar neighbor pair

screenshot

Clue 3 tells us that the battery‑powered and solar‑powered greenhouses are neighbors. The hidden value from the puzzle is that Greenhouse C runs on Battery – that makes sense because D is already Solar. So C and D are next to each other. That doesn’t tell me the exact order yet, but it narrows down which greenhouses can be adjacent.

Step 4: The green greenhouse reveals its power source and more

screenshot

Clue 4 is a big one: “The Green one is powered by Water Wheel.” That immediately tells me that wherever the green frame color is, that greenhouse uses a Water Wheel. The clue also links Greenhouse B’s frame color to Green and its power source to Water Wheel. So Greenhouse B is Green and runs on Water Wheel. Additionally, the same clue confirms Greenhouse A’s power source (Windmill) and cost ($$) – which I already had from Step 2. So now I know:

  • A: Windmill, $$
  • B: Green, Water Wheel, Warm (from initial)
  • C: Battery (hidden)
  • D: Solar Cell

Step 5: Place the yellow greenhouse furthest from solar

Clue 5 says the yellow greenhouse is farthest from the solar‑powered one. Since D is the solar greenhouse, the yellow one must be at the opposite end of the row. The clue locks Greenhouse A’s frame color to Yellow and reconfirms D’s power source and A’s Windmill and $$. So A is Yellow. Now the order starts to form – A is farthest from D, meaning A is on one end and D is on the other. That leaves B and C in the middle, but we still need their positions.

Step 6: Cold greenhouse left of the red one

Clue 6 states: “Cold greenhouse is on the left of the Red one.” The cold greenhouse is Greenhouse C (its temperature is Cold). The red one is Greenhouse D – the clue links D’s frame color to Red. So C is to the left of D. Since A is on the far left (farthest from D), the order must be A, B, C, D or A, C, B, D? But C must be left of D, so D is either third or fourth. With A on the far left, the only arrangement that satisfies C left of D and A farthest from D is A – B – C – D (A leftmost, D rightmost). Check: C is to the left of D, yes. B is between A and C. That also fits the neighbor clue from Step 3 (C and D are neighbors, which they are in this order). So the order is confirmed: A, B, C, D.

Step 7: Blue greenhouse has the lowest cost

Clue 7 says the blue greenhouse has the lowest maintenance cost, which is $. The clue links Greenhouse C to Blue and $, and also confirms A is Yellow. So C is Blue with a cost of $. Now we know all frame colors: A Yellow, B Green, C Blue, D Red. And C’s cost is $.

Step 8: The hot greenhouse isn’t the priciest

Clue 8: “Surprisingly, the Hot one is not the priciest.” The hot greenhouse is Greenhouse A (its temperature Hot). The priciest would be $$ (since the only other cost is $). A’s cost is $$, so it is priciest? Actually $$ is more than $, so A is priciest. Wait – the clue says the hot one is not the priciest. But the solved grid shows A (Hot) has $$, and C (Cold) has $, so A is indeed the priciest. That seems contradictory. Let’s re-read the clue: “Surprisingly, the Hot one is not the priciest” – with linked cells: A Temperature = Hot, A Maintenance Cost = $$, C Maintenance Cost = $. Perhaps the puzzle considers $$ as “not the priciest” because there’s a $? That would be odd. Actually the clue might mean “the hot one is not the most expensive” – but $$ is more than $, so it is. Maybe there’s a misinterpretation: the only cost values are $ and $$, so $$ is priciest. However, in the solved grid, A has $$ and C has $, so A is priciest. The clue says it’s not, but the final grid contradicts? Wait, look at the solved grid: A $$, B $$, D $$ – all three have $$. So $$ is not unique; the “priciest” would be the highest, and all three have the same. So maybe the clue means “the hot one doesn’t have the only $$?” That doesn’t parse. Let’s check the clue links: they set A temperature = Hot, A cost = $$, and C cost = $. So the purpose is to lock A’s temperature and confirm that C has the lowest cost. The phrase “not the priciest” is just flavor – it tells us that Hot isn’t the single most expensive because there are multiple $$. That fits. So we accept it: A is Hot and $$.

Now all traits are placed. The remaining cell is D’s temperature – it must be Medium (the only one left). Done.

Solution: Finish the remaining matches

After the steps above, every greenhouse has its frame color, power source, temperature, and maintenance cost fully determined. The only blank was D’s temperature, which is Medium by elimination. The final grid matches perfectly.

Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 113

Clue 2: “The only greenhouse with cost is powered by Windmill”

This one can trip you up because “cost” isn’t clearly defined. The puzzle uses maintenance cost values of $ and $$, so “cost” here refers to the $$ category. But since three greenhouses have $$, it’s confusing to call it “the only greenhouse with cost.” The real intention is to tell you that the greenhouse that does have a cost (i.e., the one that isn’t the $ exception) is powered by Windmill. Once you lock Greenhouse A as Windmill and $$, it all fits.

Clue 5: “Yellow greenhouse is the furthest from the Solar powered”

This is a position clue that only makes sense after you know Solar is D. “Furthest” means the greatest distance in the row, so the yellow greenhouse must be at the opposite end. If you forget to check the left‑to‑right order, you might put yellow anywhere. But combining it with the neighbor clue (clue 3) and the left‑of clue (clue 6) locks the order firmly.

Clue 8: “Surprisingly, the Hot one is not the priciest”

At first glance this seems to say Hot is not $$, but the final grid shows it is. The surprise is that multiple greenhouses share the same high cost, so the hot one isn’t uniquely expensive. That subtle twist can throw you off if you expect a single “priciest” value. Read it as “the hot greenhouse isn’t the only one with the highest cost,” and you’re fine.

Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 113 is a satisfying mix of direct clues and positional reasoning. The key was treating the “cost” clue as a label for the $$ maintenance value, then using the neighbor and left‑of clues to order the greenhouses. Once the order fell into place – A, B, C, D – the remaining colors, power sources, and temperatures all clicked. Keep an eye on those hidden values (like Greenhouse C’s Battery) and remember that multiple greenhouses can share the same cost. Happy solving!

Stuck on a future level? Bookmark the full Profile Perfect guide and come back anytime for the answer. And if you have thoughts or suggestions, drop them in the comments, we’d love to hear from you. Good luck and have fun!

Thanks, — Liam

Liam Stone avatar

Liam Stone

Liam Stone has played Profile Perfect since the app first launched on the Apple App Store. He spotted its potential early, and that early bet turned into hundreds of hours spent solving levels, testing clue logic, and documenting answers for other players. Liam runs the YouTube channel Puzzle Game Answer where his puzzle walkthroughs have earned over 935,000 views and a growing community of more than 800 subscribers. He covers a wide range of mobile puzzle games beyond Profile Perfect, giving him firsthand experience with how these games design clues, structure levels, and trip up even experienced players. Every guide on this site reflects that hands on experience. Liam plays each level himself, verifies every answer against the in game grid, and rewrites confusing clues into plain language so you don't need to guess. If you want more of his walkthroughs, subscribe to his channel.

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